Kellner v. Stahl

7 Pa. D. & C. 95, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 67
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedJune 15, 1925
DocketNo. 3534
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Pa. D. & C. 95 (Kellner v. Stahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kellner v. Stahl, 7 Pa. D. & C. 95, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 67 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Stern, J.,

This is a bill in equity praying for a decree of partition for premises No. 1208 Palmer Street and Nos. 446 to 458 (inclusive) Flora Street, Philadelphia, and also for a reference of the cause to a master to make such partition. On bill, answer, replication and proofs, the court makes the following findings of fact and states the following conclusions of law:

Findings of fact.

1. Mary Maier was in her lifetime seised in fee simple of the following described premises:

All those eight certain lots or pieces of ground, with the buildings a'nd improvements thereon erected, etc. . . . Being known as No. 1208 Palmer Street and Nos. 446 to 458, inclusive, Flora street. . . .

[96]*962. Mary Maier being so thereof seised died on July 9, 1913, having first made and published her last will and testament in writing bearing date Jan. 30, 1908, duly probated at Philadelphia on April 14, 1920, and registered in Will Book No. 424, page 267. . . .

3. In and by the said will of Mary Maier she did bequeath the following legacies and devises:

(a) To the North Cedar Hill Cemetery Company In Trust $200, to apply the income thereof to the perpetual care of decedent’s lot in said cemetery. . .

(b) To Kensington Lodge No. 211 F. & A. M. Pa. $2500, free of collateral inheritance tax, to be applied to the New Temple Building Fund of said Lodge.

(e)German Hospital $1000.

(d) Roosevelt Hospital $500,

(e) Wilhelmina Donal 1210 Palmer Street.

(f) Elmira L. Wood 1212 Palmer Street.

(g) Residue to the Masonic Home of Pennsylvania. . . .

By the said will the said Mary Maier did order and direct her executors to sell all her real estate except premises Nos. 1210 and 1212 Palmer Street, and make the necessary deeds, and she did appoint Henry C. F. Kellner and C. Wesley Rufifell executors of her said will.

4. On April 14, 1920, the said C. Wesley Ruffell renounced his right to act as executor, whereupon the Register of Wills for the County of Philadelphia did on the same day grant letters testamentary unto the said Henry C. F. Kellner, executor as aforesaid.

5. The heirs of Mary Maier, had she died intestate, were three nephews, Karl Friederich Stahl, Johann Wilhelm Stahl and the defendant, Gustav Albert Stahl, these three being brothers.

6. The said will of Mary Maier was executed in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, William D. Clouds and John P. Blatz, the former of whom has since died.

7. These two subscribing witnesses were, at the time of the execution of the said will of Mary Maier, members of Kensington Lodge No. 211, Free and Accepted Masons, which is a legatee to the extent of $2500 under the said will.

8. Kensington Lodge, No. 211, F. & A. M., is a subordinate lodge of the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, F. & A. M. It is not engaged in commercial business of any kind, neither is it a beneficial society, but its essential purpose is fellowship within the rules and regulations of the fraternity and according to its ancient usages and customs. Its revenue is derived from dues regularly paid to it by its members.

9. The said lodge, under its by-laws, has a committee on charity, consisting of three members, to whom should be referred all petitions for charity after being read in open lodge, and it was the duty of such committee to determine whether such applicant was worthy to receive charity from the lodge, and, if so, the committee might request the worshipful master to draw orders on the treasurer for such sum as might be granted by the lodge.

10. The books of the lodge show that during the year 1908 (the year of Mary Maier’s will) its total disbursements were $6986.97, of which $398.15 were disbursed for charity.

11. No member of the lodge has a right to demand any financial relief. Where any relief is granted, it is confined to members of the lodge and their families.

[97]*9712. The said lodge was not, at the time of the execution of the said will of Mary Maier, and never has been, a charity or an organization for religious or charitable uses.

13. The defendant has stated his willingness, as far as the legacy to the North Cedar Hill Cemetery Company is concerned, to pay the amount of said legacy to the company, and since 1913 he has paid for the care of said lot, although no definite agreement has been entered into between him and the cemetery company to that effect.

14. Prior to the probate of the said will of Mary Maier, the said Karl Friederich Stahl and Lena, his wife, and Johann Wilhelm Stahl, by indenture dated June 7, 1915, and recorded at Philadelphia on July 28, 1915, in Deed Book E. L. T., No: 497, page 457, did grant and convey, inter alia, all their (supposed) undivided two-thirds interest of, in and to the premises described in finding No. 1 hereof to the defendant, his heirs and assigns, the consideration being mentioned therein as one dollar, but the real consideration being the sum of $9000. The defendant purchased said interest in good faith and without notice of the existence of the said will of Mary Maier.

15. For the purpose of raising the said consideration money of $9000, the defendant applied to the Philadelphia Company for Guaranteeing Mortgages for a loan of $9000, to be secured, inter alia, upon the said premises, and by indenture of mortgage dated July 27, 1915, and recorded July 28, 1915, in Mortgage Book E. L. T., No. 826, page 329, mortgaged the said premises, inter alia, to the said Philadelphia Company for Guaranteeing Mortgages in said amount. The execution of said mortgage was simultaneous with the delivery of the deed mentioned in finding No. 14 hereof, and the money raised upon the said mortgage was paid by the defendant to the said Karl Friederich Stahl and Johann Wilhelm Stahl in purchase of their (supposed) two-thirds interest in said premises.

16. The defendant, by indenture bearing date Aug. 30, 1915, and recorded on Sept. 1, 1915, in Mortgage Book E. L. T., No. 826, page 439, &c., mortgaged the said premises, inter alia, to the Canstatter Building Association to secure payment of the sum of $5000.

17. The plaintiff, on April 20,1920, instituted an action in ejectment against the defendant as of C. P. No. 2, March Term, 1920, No. 4880. The defendant filed a plea, answer and abstract of title in said ejectment proceeding, denying the right of plaintiff to possession of said premises and denying his right, title or interest in said premises.

18. Upon the trial of the said ejectment suit, the trial judge ruled that the question of the validity of the will of Mary Maier as to the dispositions to charities was not one to be passed upon or to be determined in that action, and the trial judge ruled that such question could be raised only when it came to the question .of the distribution of the decedent’s estate.

19. The said ejectment suit was so proceeded in that a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff, executor as aforesaid, for a one-third interest in the said premises described in finding No. 1 hereof. On March 14, 1923, a motion for judgment n. o. v. was filed by the defendant, which motion, on June 14, 1923, was overruled by the said court in an opinion reported in 3 D. & C. 389. On Nov. 15, 1923, a writ of

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7 Pa. D. & C. 95, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellner-v-stahl-pactcomplphilad-1925.